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Æsir–Vanir War

In Norse mythology, the Æsir–Vanir War[a] was a conflict between two groups of deities that ultimately resulted in the unification of the Æsir and the Vanir into a single pantheon. The war is an important event in Norse mythology, and the implications for the potential historicity surrounding accounts of the war are a matter of scholarly debate and discourse.

Óðinn throws his spear at the Vanir host, illustration by Lorenz Frølich (1895)

Fragmented information about the war appears in surviving sources, including Völuspá, a poem collected in the Poetic Edda in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources; in the book Skáldskaparmál in the Prose Edda, written or compiled in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson; and in euhemerized form in the Ynglinga saga from Heimskringla, also often considered to have been written by Snorri Sturluson in the 13th century.

Attestations edit

Poetic Edda edit

 
Gullveig is executed, illustration by Lorenz Frølich (1895).
 
"The Æsir Against the Vanir" (1882) by Karl Ehrenberg.

In two stanzas of Völuspá, the war is recounted by a völva (who refers to herself here in the third person) while the god Óðinn questions her. The war is told rather vaguely, and the fact that it describes a war between the Æsir and the Vanir is not completely certain.[1] In the first of the two stanzas, the völva says that she remembers the first war in the world, when Gullveig was stabbed with spears and then burnt three times in one of Óðinn's halls, yet that Gullveig was reborn three times:

Henry Adams Bellows translation:
The war I remember, | the first in the world,
When the gods with spears | had smitten Gollveig,
And in the hall | of Hor had burned her,
Three times burned, | and three times born,
Oft and again, | yet ever she lives.[2]

In the second stanza, the völva says that they called Gullveig Heiðr (meaning "Bright One"[3] or potentially "Gleaming" or "Honor"[4]) whenever she came to houses, that she was a wise völva, and that she cast spells. Heiðr performed seiðr where she could, did so in a trance, and was always the favorite of wicked women:[3]

Henry Adams Bellows translation:
Heith they named her | who sought their home,
The wide-seeing witch, | in magic wise;
Minds she bewitched | that were moved by her magic,
To evil women | a joy she was.[2]

In two later stanzas, the völva tells Óðinn that all the powers went to the judgment seats and discussed whether the Æsir should pay a fine or if all of the gods should instead have equal tribute, then the völva provides the last of her account of the events surrounding the war. These stanzas are unclear, particularly the second half of the first stanza, but the battle appears to have been precipitated by the entry of Gullveig/Heiðr among the Æsir.[5] The first stanza relates a difficulty in reaching a truce which led to the all-out war described in the second stanza. However, the reference to "all the gods" could, in Lindow's view, indicate a movement towards a community involving both the Æsir and the Vanir.[5] In his translation of the poem, Bellows inverts the order of the two stanzas, stating that "This stanza and stanza 24 [the first and second stanzas] have been transposed from the order in the manuscripts, for the former describes the battle and the victory of the Wanes [Vanir], after which the gods took council, debating whether to pay tribute to the victors, or to admit them, as was finally done, to equal rights of worship."[6] Ursula Dronke points to extensive wordplay on all the meanings of the gildi and the adjective gildr to signal the core issue of whether the Æsir will surrender their monopoly on human tribute and join with the "all-too-popular" Vanir; as their only alternative, they attack again.[7]

Henry Adams Bellows translation, in his inverted order:
On the host his spear | did Othin hurl,
Then in the world | did war first come;
The wall that girdled | the gods was broken,
And the field by the warlike | Wanes was trodden.
Then sought the gods | their assembly-seats,
The holy ones, | and council held,
Whether the gods | should tribute give,
Or to all alike | should worship belong.[6]
John Lindow translation, in the order of the original manuscript:
Then all the powers went to the judgment seats
the very holy gods, and discussed this:
whether the æsir should pay a fine,
or all the gods should have tribute.
That was yet the battle of armies, the first one in the world.
Odin let fly and shot into the army,
The shield wall of the fortress of the æsir was broken,
The battle-wise vanir knew how to tread the field.[5]

Prose Edda edit

In the Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, the god Bragi explains the origin of poetry. Bragi says that it originated in the Æsir–Vanir War, when during the peace conference the Æsir and the Vanir formed a truce by all spitting into a vat. When they left, the gods decided that it should not be poured out, but rather kept as a symbol of their peace, and so from the contents made a man, Kvasir. Kvasir is later murdered, and from his blood is made the Mead of Poetry.[8]

Heimskringla edit

 
Óðinn with Mímir's body, illustration by Georg Pauli (1893)

In Heimskringla, the author presents a euhemerized account of the war. The account says that Óðinn led a great army from "Asgard" to attack the people of "Vanaheim." However, according to the author, the people of Vanaheim were well-prepared for the invasion; they defended their land so well that victory was up for grabs from both sides, and both sides produced immense damage and ravaged the lands of one another.[9]

The two sides eventually tired of the war and both agreed to meet to establish a truce. After doing so, they exchanged hostages. Vanaheim is described as having sent to Asgard its best men: Njörðr—described as wealthy—and his son Freyr in exchange for Asgard Hœnir—described here as large, handsome, and thought of by the people of Vanaheim well-suited to be a chieftain. Additionally, Asgard sends Mímir—a man of great understanding—in exchange for Kvasir, which the author describes as the wisest man of Vanaheim.[9] Upon arrival in Vanaheim, Hœnir was immediately made chief, and Mímir often gave him good counsel. However, when Hœnir was at meetings and at the Thing without Mímir by his side, he would always answer the same way: "Let others decide." Subsequently, the Vanaheim folk suspected they had been cheated in the exchange by the Asgard folk, so they seized Mímir and beheaded him and sent the head to Asgard. Óðinn took the head of Mímir, embalmed it with herbs so that it would not rot, and spoke charms over it, which gave it the power to speak to him and reveal to him secrets.[9]

Óðinn then appointed Njörðr and Freyr to be priests of sacrificial customs and they became Diar ("Gods") of the people of Asgard. Freyja, described as daughter of Njörðr, was the priestess of these sacrifices, and here she is described as introducing seiðr to Asgard.[9]

Theories edit

A number of theories surround the Æsir–Vanir War:

Proto-Indo-European basis edit

As the Vanir are often considered fertility gods, the Æsir–Vanir War has been proposed as a reflection of the invasion of local fertility cults somewhere in regions inhabited by the Germanic peoples by a more aggressive, warlike cult.[5] This has been proposed as an analogy of the invasion of the Indo-Europeans.[5]

Georges Dumézil stated that the war need not necessarily be understood in terms of historicity more than any other myth however.[10] Scholars have cited parallels between the Æsir–Vanir War, The Rape of the Sabine Women from Roman mythology, and the battle between Devas and Asuras from Hindu mythology, providing support for a Proto-Indo-European "war of the functions." Explaining these parallels, J. P. Mallory states:

Basically, the parallels concern the presence of first-(magico-juridical) and second-(warrior) function representatives on the victorious side of a war that ultimately subdues and incorporates third function characters, for example, the Sabine women or the Norse Vanir. Indeed, the Iliad itself has also been examined in a similar light. The ultimate structure of the myth, then, is that the three estates of Proto-Indo-European society were fused only after a war between the first two against the third.[11]

Other edit

Many scholars consider the figures of Gullveig/Heiðr and Freyja the same.[12] This conclusion has been reached through comparisons between Gullveig/Heiðr's use of seiðr in Völuspá and the mention of Freyja introducing seiðr to the Æsir from the Vanir in Heimskringla.[5] This is at times taken further, to suggest that their "corruption" of the Æsir led to the Æsir–Vanir War.[5]

Lindow states that even if the two are not identical, the various accounts of the war seem to share the idea of a disruptive entry of persons into a people.[5] Lindow compares the appearance of Gullveig/Heiðr into the Æsir to Hœnir and Mímir's disruption among the Vanir in Heimskringla.[5] Lindow further states that all three accounts share the notion of acquisition of tools for the conquest of wisdom; the practice of seiðr in two accounts and the head of Mímir in one.[5]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Norwegian: Vanekrigen / Krigen mellom æser og vaner, Danish: Krigen mellem aser og vaner, Swedish: Vanakriget / Krig mellan asar och vaner.

References edit

  1. ^ Crawford (2015:1)
  2. ^ a b Bellows (1923:10).
  3. ^ a b Larrington (1996:7).
  4. ^ Lindow (2001:165).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lindow (2001:51-53).
  6. ^ a b Bellows (1923:11).
  7. ^ Dronke (1997:134).
  8. ^ Faulkes (1995:61—62).
  9. ^ a b c d Hollander (1964:7-8).
  10. ^ Dumézil (1973:Chapter 1).
  11. ^ Mallory (2005:139).
  12. ^ Grundy (1998:62).

Bibliography edit

  • Crawford, Jackson (2015). The Poetic Edda: Stories of the Norse Gods and Heroes. Hackett Publishing Company.
  • Bellows, Henry Adams (1923). The Poetic Edda. American-Scandinavian Foundation.
  • Dronke, Ursula (Ed. and Trans.) (1997), The Poetic Edda volume 2: Mythological Poems. Clarendon Press ISBN 0-19-811181-9
  • Dumézil, Georges (1973). Gods of the Ancient Northmen, trans. Einar Haugen. University of California Press ISBN 0-05-200350-7
  • Faulkes, Anthony (Trans.) (1995). Snorri Sturluson. Edda. Everyman. ISBN 0-460-87616-3
  • Grundy, Stephan (1998). "Freyja and Frigg" as collected in Billington, Sandra. The Concept of the Goddess.. Routledge ISBN 0-415-19789-9
  • Hollander, Lee Milton (Trans.) (1964). Heimskringla: History of the Kings of Norway. University of Texas Press ISBN 0-292-73061-6
  • Larrington, Carolyne (Trans.) (1999). The Poetic Edda. Oxford World's Classics ISBN 0-19-283946-2
  • Lindow, John (2001). Norse Mythology: A Guide to the Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515382-0
  • Mallory, J. P. (2005). In Search of the Indo-Europeans. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-27616-1

Æsir, vanir, norse, mythology, conflict, between, groups, deities, that, ultimately, resulted, unification, Æsir, vanir, into, single, pantheon, important, event, norse, mythology, implications, potential, historicity, surrounding, accounts, matter, scholarly,. In Norse mythology the AEsir Vanir War a was a conflict between two groups of deities that ultimately resulted in the unification of the AEsir and the Vanir into a single pantheon The war is an important event in Norse mythology and the implications for the potential historicity surrounding accounts of the war are a matter of scholarly debate and discourse odinn throws his spear at the Vanir host illustration by Lorenz Frolich 1895 Fragmented information about the war appears in surviving sources including Voluspa a poem collected in the Poetic Edda in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources in the book Skaldskaparmal in the Prose Edda written or compiled in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson and in euhemerized form in the Ynglinga saga from Heimskringla also often considered to have been written by Snorri Sturluson in the 13th century Contents 1 Attestations 1 1 Poetic Edda 1 2 Prose Edda 1 3 Heimskringla 2 Theories 2 1 Proto Indo European basis 2 2 Other 3 See also 4 Notes and references 4 1 Notes 4 2 References 4 3 BibliographyAttestations editPoetic Edda edit nbsp Gullveig is executed illustration by Lorenz Frolich 1895 nbsp The AEsir Against the Vanir 1882 by Karl Ehrenberg In two stanzas of Voluspa the war is recounted by a volva who refers to herself here in the third person while the god odinn questions her The war is told rather vaguely and the fact that it describes a war between the AEsir and the Vanir is not completely certain 1 In the first of the two stanzas the volva says that she remembers the first war in the world when Gullveig was stabbed with spears and then burnt three times in one of odinn s halls yet that Gullveig was reborn three times Henry Adams Bellows translation The war I remember the first in the world When the gods with spears had smitten Gollveig And in the hall of Hor had burned her Three times burned and three times born Oft and again yet ever she lives 2 In the second stanza the volva says that they called Gullveig Heidr meaning Bright One 3 or potentially Gleaming or Honor 4 whenever she came to houses that she was a wise volva and that she cast spells Heidr performed seidr where she could did so in a trance and was always the favorite of wicked women 3 Henry Adams Bellows translation Heith they named her who sought their home The wide seeing witch in magic wise Minds she bewitched that were moved by her magic To evil women a joy she was 2 In two later stanzas the volva tells odinn that all the powers went to the judgment seats and discussed whether the AEsir should pay a fine or if all of the gods should instead have equal tribute then the volva provides the last of her account of the events surrounding the war These stanzas are unclear particularly the second half of the first stanza but the battle appears to have been precipitated by the entry of Gullveig Heidr among the AEsir 5 The first stanza relates a difficulty in reaching a truce which led to the all out war described in the second stanza However the reference to all the gods could in Lindow s view indicate a movement towards a community involving both the AEsir and the Vanir 5 In his translation of the poem Bellows inverts the order of the two stanzas stating that This stanza and stanza 24 the first and second stanzas have been transposed from the order in the manuscripts for the former describes the battle and the victory of the Wanes Vanir after which the gods took council debating whether to pay tribute to the victors or to admit them as was finally done to equal rights of worship 6 Ursula Dronke points to extensive wordplay on all the meanings of the gildi and the adjective gildr to signal the core issue of whether the AEsir will surrender their monopoly on human tribute and join with the all too popular Vanir as their only alternative they attack again 7 Henry Adams Bellows translation in his inverted order On the host his spear did Othin hurl Then in the world did war first come The wall that girdled the gods was broken And the field by the warlike Wanes was trodden Then sought the gods their assembly seats The holy ones and council held Whether the gods should tribute give Or to all alike should worship belong 6 John Lindow translation in the order of the original manuscript Then all the powers went to the judgment seats the very holy gods and discussed this whether the aesir should pay a fine or all the gods should have tribute That was yet the battle of armies the first one in the world Odin let fly and shot into the army The shield wall of the fortress of the aesir was broken The battle wise vanir knew how to tread the field 5 Prose Edda edit In the Prose Edda book Skaldskaparmal the god Bragi explains the origin of poetry Bragi says that it originated in the AEsir Vanir War when during the peace conference the AEsir and the Vanir formed a truce by all spitting into a vat When they left the gods decided that it should not be poured out but rather kept as a symbol of their peace and so from the contents made a man Kvasir Kvasir is later murdered and from his blood is made the Mead of Poetry 8 Heimskringla edit nbsp odinn with Mimir s body illustration by Georg Pauli 1893 In Heimskringla the author presents a euhemerized account of the war The account says that odinn led a great army from Asgard to attack the people of Vanaheim However according to the author the people of Vanaheim were well prepared for the invasion they defended their land so well that victory was up for grabs from both sides and both sides produced immense damage and ravaged the lands of one another 9 The two sides eventually tired of the war and both agreed to meet to establish a truce After doing so they exchanged hostages Vanaheim is described as having sent to Asgard its best men Njordr described as wealthy and his son Freyr in exchange for Asgard Hœnir described here as large handsome and thought of by the people of Vanaheim well suited to be a chieftain Additionally Asgard sends Mimir a man of great understanding in exchange for Kvasir which the author describes as the wisest man of Vanaheim 9 Upon arrival in Vanaheim Hœnir was immediately made chief and Mimir often gave him good counsel However when Hœnir was at meetings and at the Thing without Mimir by his side he would always answer the same way Let others decide Subsequently the Vanaheim folk suspected they had been cheated in the exchange by the Asgard folk so they seized Mimir and beheaded him and sent the head to Asgard odinn took the head of Mimir embalmed it with herbs so that it would not rot and spoke charms over it which gave it the power to speak to him and reveal to him secrets 9 odinn then appointed Njordr and Freyr to be priests of sacrificial customs and they became Diar Gods of the people of Asgard Freyja described as daughter of Njordr was the priestess of these sacrifices and here she is described as introducing seidr to Asgard 9 Theories editA number of theories surround the AEsir Vanir War Proto Indo European basis edit As the Vanir are often considered fertility gods the AEsir Vanir War has been proposed as a reflection of the invasion of local fertility cults somewhere in regions inhabited by the Germanic peoples by a more aggressive warlike cult 5 This has been proposed as an analogy of the invasion of the Indo Europeans 5 Georges Dumezil stated that the war need not necessarily be understood in terms of historicity more than any other myth however 10 Scholars have cited parallels between the AEsir Vanir War The Rape of the Sabine Women from Roman mythology and the battle between Devas and Asuras from Hindu mythology providing support for a Proto Indo European war of the functions Explaining these parallels J P Mallory states Basically the parallels concern the presence of first magico juridical and second warrior function representatives on the victorious side of a war that ultimately subdues and incorporates third function characters for example the Sabine women or the Norse Vanir Indeed the Iliad itself has also been examined in a similar light The ultimate structure of the myth then is that the three estates of Proto Indo European society were fused only after a war between the first two against the third 11 Other edit Many scholars consider the figures of Gullveig Heidr and Freyja the same 12 This conclusion has been reached through comparisons between Gullveig Heidr s use of seidr in Voluspa and the mention of Freyja introducing seidr to the AEsir from the Vanir in Heimskringla 5 This is at times taken further to suggest that their corruption of the AEsir led to the AEsir Vanir War 5 Lindow states that even if the two are not identical the various accounts of the war seem to share the idea of a disruptive entry of persons into a people 5 Lindow compares the appearance of Gullveig Heidr into the AEsir to Hœnir and Mimir s disruption among the Vanir in Heimskringla 5 Lindow further states that all three accounts share the notion of acquisition of tools for the conquest of wisdom the practice of seidr in two accounts and the head of Mimir in one 5 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to AEsir Vanir War Gigantomachy Theomachy Titanomachy War in Heaven Devas Asuras Tollense valley battlefieldNotes and references editNotes edit Norwegian Vanekrigen Krigen mellom aeser og vaner Danish Krigen mellem aser og vaner Swedish Vanakriget Krig mellan asar och vaner References edit Crawford 2015 1 a b Bellows 1923 10 a b Larrington 1996 7 Lindow 2001 165 a b c d e f g h i j Lindow 2001 51 53 a b Bellows 1923 11 Dronke 1997 134 Faulkes 1995 61 62 a b c d Hollander 1964 7 8 Dumezil 1973 Chapter 1 Mallory 2005 139 Grundy 1998 62 Bibliography edit Crawford Jackson 2015 The Poetic Edda Stories of the Norse Gods and Heroes Hackett Publishing Company Bellows Henry Adams 1923 The Poetic Edda American Scandinavian Foundation Dronke Ursula Ed and Trans 1997 The Poetic Edda volume 2 Mythological Poems Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 811181 9 Dumezil Georges 1973 Gods of the Ancient Northmen trans Einar Haugen University of California Press ISBN 0 05 200350 7 Faulkes Anthony Trans 1995 Snorri Sturluson Edda Everyman ISBN 0 460 87616 3 Grundy Stephan 1998 Freyja and Frigg as collected in Billington Sandra The Concept of the Goddess Routledge ISBN 0 415 19789 9 Hollander Lee Milton Trans 1964 Heimskringla History of the Kings of Norway University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 73061 6 Larrington Carolyne Trans 1999 The Poetic Edda Oxford World s Classics ISBN 0 19 283946 2 Lindow John 2001 Norse Mythology A Guide to the Gods Heroes Rituals and Beliefs Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515382 0 Mallory J P 2005 In Search of the Indo Europeans Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 27616 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AEsir Vanir War amp oldid 1145083981, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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